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Hague Convention Abolishing The
Requirement Of Legalisation For Foreign Public Documents
5 October 1961
PREAMBLE
The States signatory to the present Convention, desiring to abolish the
requirement of diplomatic or consular legalisation for foreign public
documents,
have resolved to conclude a Convention to this effect and have agreed
upon the following provisions:
SUBSTANTIVE TEXT OF THE CONVENTION
Article 1
The present Convention shall apply to public documents which have been
executed in the territory of one Contracting State and which have to be
produced in the territory of another Contracting State.
For the purposes of the present Convention, the following are deemed to
be public documents:
(a) documents emanating from an authority or an official connected with
the courts or tribunals 1of the State, including those emanating from a
public prosecutor, a clerk of a court or a process server (“huissier de
justice”);
(b) administrative documents;
(c) notarial acts;
(d) official certificates which are placed on documents signed by
persons in their private capacity, such as official certificates
recording the registration of a document or the fact that it was in
existence on a certain date and official and notarial authentications of
signatures.
However, the present Convention shall not apply:
(a) to documents executed by diplomatic or consular agents;
(b) to administrative documents dealing directly with commercial or
customs operations.
Article 2
Each Contracting State shall exempt from legalisation documents to which
the present Convention applies and which have to be produced in its
territory. For the purposes of the present Convention, legalisation
means only the formality by which the diplomatic or consular agents of
the country in which the document has to be produced certify the
authenticity of the signature, the capacity in which the person signing
the document has acted and, where appropriate, the identity of the seal
or stamp which it bears.
Article 3
The only formality that may be required in order to certify the
authenticity of the signature, the capacity in which the person signing
the document has acted and, where appropriate, the identity of the seal
or stamp which it bears, is the addition of the certificate described in
Article 4, issued by the competent authority of the State from which the
document emanates.
However, the formality mentioned in the preceding paragraph cannot be
required when either the laws, regulations, or practice in force in the
State where the document is produced or an agreement between two or more
Contracting States have abolished or simplified it, or exempt the
document itself from legalisation.
Article 4
The certificate referred to in the first paragraph of Article 3 shall be
placed on the document itself or on an “allonge”, it shall be in the
form of the model annexed to the present Convention.
It may, however, be drawn up in the official language of the authority
which issues it.
The standard terms appearing therein may be in a second language also.
The title
“Apostille (Convention de La Haye du 5 octobre 1961)” shall be in the
French language.
Article 5
The certificate shall be issued at the request of the person who has
signed the document or of any bearer.
When properly filled in, it will certify the authenticity of the
signature, the capacity in which the person signing the document has
acted and, where appropriate, the identity of the seal or stamp which
the document bears.
The signature, seal and stamp on the certificate are exempt from all
certification.
Article 6
Each Contracting State shall designate by reference to their official
function, the authorities who are competent to issue the certificate
referred to in the first paragraph of Article 3.
It shall give notice of such designation to the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs of the
Netherlands at the time it deposits its instrument of ratification or of
accession or its declaration of extension.
It shall also give notice of any change in the designated authorities.
Article 7
Each of the authorities designated in accordance with Article 6 shall
keep a register or card index in which it shall record the certificates
issued, specifying:
(a) the number and date of the certificate,
(b) the name of the person signing the public document and the capacity
in which he has acted, or in the case of unsigned documents, the name of
the authority which has affixed the seal or stamp.
At the request of any interested person, the authority which has issued
the certificate shall verify whether the particulars in the certificate
correspond with those in the register or card index.
Article 8
When a treaty, convention or agreement between two or more Contracting
States contains provisions which subject the certification of a
signature, seal or stamp to certain formalities, the present Convention
will only override such provisions if those formalities are more
rigorous than the formality referred to in Articles 3 and 4.
Article 9
Each Contracting State shall take the necessary steps to prevent the
performance of legalisation's by its diplomatic or consular agents in
cases where the present Convention provides for exemption.
Article 10
The present Convention shall be open for signature by the States
represented at the
Ninth Session of the Hague Conference on Private International Law and
Iceland, Ireland, Liechtenstein and Turkey.
It shall be ratified, and the instruments of ratification shall be
deposited with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands.
Article 11
The present Convention shall enter into force on the sixtieth day after
the deposit of the third instrument of ratification referred to in the
second paragraph of Article 10.
The Convention shall enter into force for each signatory State which
ratifies subsequently on the sixtieth day after the deposit of its
instrument of ratification.
Article 12
Any State not referred to in Article 10 may accede to the present
Convention after it has entered into force in accordance with the first
paragraph of Article 11. The instrument of accession shall be deposited
with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands.
Such accession shall have effect only as regards the relations between
the acceding
State and those Contracting States which have not raised an objection to
its accession in the six months after the receipt of the notification
referred to in sub-paragraph d) of Article 15. Any such objection shall
be notified to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands.
The Convention shall enter into force as between the acceding State and
the States which have raised no objection to its accession on the
sixtieth day after the expiry of the period of six months mentioned in
the preceding paragraph.
Article 13
Any State may, at the time of signature, ratification or accession,
declare that the present Convention shall extend to all the territories
for the international relations of which it is responsible, or to one or
more of them. Such a declaration shall take effect on the date of entry
into force of the Convention for the State concerned.
At any time thereafter, such extensions shall be notified to the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands.
When the declaration of extension is made by a State which has signed
and ratified, the Convention shall enter into force for the territories
concerned in accordance with Article 11. When the declaration of
extension is made by a State which has acceded, the Convention shall
enter into force for the territories concerned in accordance with
Article 12.
Article 14
The present Convention shall remain in force for five years from the
date of its entry into force in accordance with the first paragraph of
Article 11, even for States which have ratified it or acceded to it
subsequently.
If there has been no denunciation, the Convention shall be renewed
tacitly every five years. Any denunciation shall be notified to the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands at least six months
before the end of the five year period.
It may be limited to certain of the territories to which the Convention
applies.
The denunciation will only have effect as regards the State which has
notified it. The
Convention shall remain in force for the other Contracting States.
Article 15
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands shall give notice to
the States referred to in Article 10, and to the States which have
acceded in accordance with
Article 12, of the following:
(a) the notifications referred to in the second paragraph of Article 6;
63
(b) the signatures and ratifications referred to in Article 10; 64
(c) the date on which the present Convention enters into force in
accordance with the
first paragraph of Article 11;
(d) the accessions and objections referred to in Article 12 and the date
on which such
accessions take effect;
(e) the extensions referred to in Article 13 and the date on which they
take effect; 67
(f) the denunciations referred to in the third paragraph of Article 14.
TESTEMONIUM
In witness whereof the undersigned, being duly authorised thereto, have
signed the present Convention.
Done at The Hague the 5th October 1961, in French and in English, the
French text prevailing in case of divergence between the two texts, in a
single copy which shall be deposited in the archives of the Government
of the Netherlands, and of which a certified copy shall be sent, through
the diplomatic channel, to each of the States represented at the Ninth
Session of the Hague Conference on Private International Law and also to
Iceland, Ireland, Liechtenstein and Turkey.
Source: http://hcch.e-vision.nl
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